German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer has become the latest in a series of senior Europeans to warn the US against unilateral action in the war on terror.

The international coalition against terror does not provide a
basis for doing just anything against anybody - and
certainly not by going it alone

Joschka Fischer

"Without compelling evidence, it will not be a good
idea to launch something that will mean going it alone," Mr Fischer told the Die Welt newspaper.

"The international coalition against terror does not provide a
basis for doing just anything against anybody - and
certainly not by going it alone. This is the view of every
European foreign minister."

President Bush's speech has caused a backlash at home and abroad

His comments come a day after Russian President Vladimir warned the US against launching an attack on Iraq, one of the country's labelled by President Bush as forming an "axis of evil".

Mr Fischer said that a peaceful future could not be guaranteed by the world's greatest power acting alone.

"I utterly reject anti-Americanism. But, for all the
differences in size and weight, alliance partnerships
between free democracies cannot be reduced to obedience," he said.

"Alliance partners are not satellites."

Throwing Iran, North Korea and Iraq into one pot - where should that lead us?

Joschka Fischer

Mr Fischer criticised President Bush's decision to lump Iran, North Korea and Iraq together under the "axis of evil" label, saying it did not "take us further".

The coalition against terror began with solid support from across Europe, from the EU to Russia.

For weeks no-one broke ranks, but as talk grew of widening the war beyond Afghanistan, concerns started to emerge.

Criticism of US policy has come from several key figures:

President Putin said any use of force by the US against Iraq "should be justified" and have the backing of the international community